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> Many ATM machines ran it because it was 8000% more stable than any of microsoft's Operating systems

A lot of the ATMs that ran OS/2 ran the Microsoft version of OS/2 (yes, Microsoft developed the first versions of OS/2 for IBM and had permission to OEM it, just like DOS). OS/2 went to IBM from v2.0, IIRC.

"The court established that Apple could not make copyright claims based on these ideas and could only make claims on the precise expression of them."

And the key word here is _precisely_.

> - trashcan copiedActually, that's exactly why Microsoft never called it the "trashcan". They called it a Recycle Bin. It looks different, too.

> Shutdown procedure copiedWindows has a start button attached to a start menu. To shut down, you go Start > Shut down... >... This is not _precisely_ the same as the Mac.

And so on...

The point is look-and-feel protection is a very narrow protection. It protects you from lookalikes, not workalikes.

And finally: sue or shut up. Frankly, if some Mac fans (or Apple) feel Windows 7 ripped the Mac off, they ought to get Apple to sue. Lord knows Apple isn't litigation-shy. Thankfully, their lawyers are a little more grown-up than the average Mac fanboy.

I've been using Firefox since Phoenix 0.5 (December 2002 iirc, almost seven years now) and I have to say, the community process and the extensions make Firefox what it is.

Yes, these days there's another open source browser on the block (Chrome) and it too is very good. But it's great to have Mozilla and Firefox around because you can be sure that Mozilla will look after users' interests far more than Google or Microsoft will. If nothing else, it keeps the others honest.

Linux had this since the beginning. The advantage of never having the windowing system integrated with the operating system. It's not a nifty innovative feature of Windows 7, it's Microsoft finally catching up with the rest of the industry as always.

Linux did not and does not have this feature. If X crashes, It's Ctrl Alt Backspace time, and you lose your work. And X can hard crash to the point where even Ctrl Alt Backspace doesn't work -- it's not an everyday occurrence but it does happen. In fact, the link I pointed to asked why Linux distros hadn't included this feature yet.

Boot time is fucking meaningless compared to actual operating speed. So you got to your desktop snappy? How fast is the fucking desktop? Stop bringing boot speed up as a meaningful metric of how fast an operating system is. It's stupid.

Geez. A mouth-breathing idiot who knows the f-word and isn't afraid to use it. Like I said, the time-to-desktop is snappy. This matters in the real world because workplace (and many home) PCs are switched off after use. Anyway, the desktop is snappy too, thanks for asking.

The OP asked a question about what Windows 7 brought to the table over Windows XP. I answered that the best I could. Of course, for morons like you, no thread on/. is complete without a rant about how Linux had it first, is superior to every other OS and is the be-all and end-all of technology. You know what? Users like you are the reason why Linux has a perception problem in the marketplace (to put it politely).

7 also supports multiple drivers for multiple adapters, but that's a bit esoteric.

Libraries are useful if you're not compulsive about organizing your files.

The user home folder is now sanely organized (C:\Users\User\Videos, C:\Users\User\Downloads, C:\Users\User\Documents, not C:\Documents and Settings\Username\My Documents\My Videos).

Ships with Powershell. Decent scripting out of the box.

The taskbar works MUCH better than XP/Vista and imho even the OSX dock. You no longer have to choose between the insanity of XP style grouped taskbar buttons and an overflowing taskbar. Much better window mgmt tools (e.g. desktop peek).

Very subjective, but feels snappy. Time to login screen and time to a usable desktop is much lower than Vista.

Built-in Windows Media Player (v12) starts quickly and is a pleasure to use. To be fair v11 was pretty good too, but v12 plays DivX (and all the xvids I've thrown at it) and most Quicktime MOVs. The interface is minimal if you double-click a media file. You get a simple rectangle containing the media, or a small square if it's an audio file. You get the full interface only if you start the app or click the expand UI button. This is what iTunes should have been like.

Explorer has improved its "are you sure" dialogs and made them much more usable/informative. Thumbnail previews are much faster. On the other hand, the new explorer takes some getting used to over the XP one -- the toolbar is non-customizable and not very useful imho.

This is slightly off-topic, but your original post reminded me of something a Stanford Professor whose name I'd forgotten was pushing -- he was essentially calling for developed countries to set up autonomous zones in 3rd world countries and transfer their laws and rulesets to the 3rd world. This wouldn't be colonialism because it would be done essentially altruistically and with a legally enforceable get-out clause.

A few hours after replying to your post I came across this article on the Freakonomics blog with an interview with him... he's fleshed out his proposal a little more and calls it "Charter cities" these days. It certainly makes for very interesting reading, especially considering your point about whether a "culture is too fundamentally backward".

Personally, I don't believe any culture is too 'fundamentally backward', and that any culture where a middle class can be bootstrapped will do well -- the challenge is bootstrapping one, and here Romer's ideas are provocative and potentially very useful.

India is as solid as it is because its former dozen warring states (remember, it was not always a single country) got head-banged by the Brits during the Imperial era -- if that job had been finished, rather than abandoned as the British Empire fell apart, we might not have today's conflicts, or at least they'd be on a smaller scale

That's an interesting example, but I don't think colonialism alone can build nations.

In India's case, the British didn't leave India with Indians marching into the sunrise in patriotic unison. Oh sure, the post-Independence honeymoon lasted a year or two, but secession and splintering back into a bunch of states was never really off the table for the first quarter-century after Independence, and it was especially touchy because of the partition that accompanied Independence.

Hell, there are sporadic movements *now* but they're not considered serious threats any more, largely because India's political system has evolved to the point that even very small sections of society can get a voice in the political process.

So while Britain did do a lot to create a modern nation-state, I think post-Independence Indian society deserves a lot of credit for seeing that, to misquote Ben Franklin, it's better to hang together than be hanged separately.

The bigger point is the British did all of this in many places, including Africa. The problem is, as soon as they left, the societies fell back to their old patterns of conflict. I'm not sure more Imperialism would have fixed that.

Imperialism may be "evil" if your small state is the loser, but in the long view it appears to stop more trouble than it causes.

Imperialism is evil because imperial powers don't come into colonized countries even wearing the fig leaf of spreading democracy or development, they come to use the resources of the colonized country the best they can. In India's case, the British exploited India's farmers with exploitative taxes (even during famine years) and took as much of India's natural resources (mined metal, timber, etc) as they could given a 19th century supply chain. Whatever problems arise *after* an imperial power leaves, at least they are problems brought upon by the people themselves, not a foreign power.

A physiotherapist in an early episode tried to correct that. He switched back.

"It was a big issue early on about which hand he holds the cane in," says executive producer and series creator David Shore. "The thought was he should hold the cane in the opposite arm from the injury. That is basically true -- most people use the opposite arm. But some people feel more comfortable with a cane in the dominant arm, and that is acceptable."

I sincerely wonder, why didn't you just use Qt for the UI from thebeginning? It blends very well with the native look&feel on eachplatform, while still letting you implement the distinctive Chromefeatures. Qt 4.5 will even have native look in GNOME.

Ben Goodger:

In general, we've avoided cross platform UI toolkits because whilethey may offer what superficially appears to be a quick path to nativelooking UI on a variety of target platforms, once you go a bit deeperit turns out to be a bit more problematic. As Amanda says, your appends up "speaking with a foreign accent".

Our experience is that using these frameworks also limits what you cando to a lowest common denominator subset of what's supported by thatframework on each platform....The architecture of Chrome has converged over the past fewmonths on a solid separation of view from state, and this has given usthe flexibility to make these decisions and choose from the widestrange of alternatives.

You may have missed, but AMD has quietly rolled out the ATI Radeon X1050
, an entry-level graphics chip intended for board makers to offer as a minimum-specification Windows Vista Aero Glass-friendly upgrade. "The X1050 contains 16 pixel shaders in four pipelines and fed by a pair of vertex shaders. It's a PCI Express part, but the connection of a bridge chip makes AGP boards a possibility too. Three

LittleGuernica (736577) writes "I often have my bittorrent client running, downloading the software of my choice. As all the data trickles in, I wonder if it slowly kills my harddrive, because data keeps being written and read constantly. Is Bittorrent straining my harddisk or is it business as usual?"